ME DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Thursday Morning, October 27, 1869. [From Blackwood'* Magazine.] COUSIN JOHN'S PROPERTY. "On the 11th nit., at Point de Galle, Cey lon, on the voyage home, John Simpson, Esq., Her Majesty's Consul at Tranquebar." " Bless my life, Sally," said Mr. Simpson, almost choking himself with his muffin, "here's cousin John dead I" Mr. Simpson bad the Times for ail honr ev ery morning (at six pence per week), and that hour being his breakfast allowance also, he read tuid ate against time, taking a bite of muffin, a sip of tea, aud a glance at the paper alter nately ; aud as he was very short s ghted, and always in a hurry, there seemed imraineut risk sometimes of his putting the paper iuto his mouth instead of his muffin. " You don't mean to say so, Simpson," said the lady on the other side of the lit tie fire place. "Cousin John dead ! Why, he was to be in town next month—it's impossible ! Where do it say so ?" Aud she made au attempt to reach across for the paper ; but it was a long stretch, and Mrs. Simpson was stout, aud hardly made due allowance for that fact in her instructions to her stay maker ; so Mr. Simpson found himself master of the position, and proceeded to read the announcement again, with a proper sense of importance. Miss Augusta Simpson, and her brother, Master Samuel, who occupied the seats at the other side of the family breakfast table, had risen front theii places, and with their months and eyes open, cud Master Sam uel's knife arrested in a threatening position, formed rather a striking tableau. " Then that Surrey properly comes to us, Mr. 5.," exclaimed the lady, as she left her arm-chair, and made good her hold on one side of the Times, o I which her husband still per tinaciously retained possession. "It comes to me, my dear, as next heir, by uncle Sam's will—uo doubt of it." It Mr. Simpson intended a little geutle self-assertion in his speech, it was so unusual with him, that Mrs. Simpsou was good enough not to uotice it. "It's worth two or three thousand a year, Simpson, isu't it ?" "About one thousand, or fourteen hundred at most, my dear, us I have told you before," replied the husband. " It's a very nice prop erty. Dear uie ! poor Johu ! only to think ! that be should never have come home to enjoy it!" and the goodmatured Mr. Simpson gave an honest sigh to the memory of his departed cousin, and for a moment forgot his own ac cession of fortuue. " Well, well, life's uncertain with all of us. I never thought you'd outlived him, Simpson ; he was tea years youuger than you, if he were a day. I did think it might have been our Samuel's in days to come, supposing he died without children, as was always likely from what I heard of him. I ofteu did say I hoped Sammy might be a gentleman." Samuel wiped his lips in preparation for that crisis. He bad been eating a second egg sur reptitiously aud hastily. Ou!v a mother's eyes could have detected the future geutlemau uu der the pinafore at that momeut. "There's the 'bus, lather," he shouted, jumping up with the view of effecting a diversion from his own seat of operatious ; " there's the 'bus coming round ?" Mr. Simpson rose mechanically, and dropped the Times. Tne habits of tweuty years were not to be shaken eveu by the suddeu prospe'-t of a thousaud a year But iiis daughter, with the spirit ot a true British unidea iu the hours of fortuue, showed herself equal to the occa sion. "Who wants the 'bus?" said she, with an indigoant shove to Samuel. "Pa aiut go.ug by 'busses now." Like all truly great speeches, it was short, and to the purpose. As such, it was loug re membered iu the family. It awoke them at once to the duties and the pleasures of their new positiou. That useful publie vehicle did not take Mr. Simpson to Aldermanbury thai morning. The couduetor looked at the well known door in vaiu ; the civil driver even let his horses linger a little ere he turued the corner ; and both turned a long and la-t inquiring gaze in the direction of Portland Terrace, No. 4. " What's come o' the Governor this morning, Bill? Are we arler or afore our time ?" "Not above two minutes arter ; he've never been aud gone by the Royal Bloe ? ' Don't think he'd be so mea i as that ; snra mat's amiss, hoirrrer ." And with this compli ment to Mr. Simpson's business habits, the omnibus lumbered on without him. Great was the surprise, and as the morning wore on, even the anxiety, iu the little dark offices in Alder manbury. Such a thing as Mr Simpson's ab sence, without due cause assigned, was uu known hitherto in that most punctual and re spectable establishment ; and Mr. Styles, the old clerk, who had a sincere, if not a demon strative affection for his principal was scarcely prevented, by a sense of what was due to the d.trmty of both parties, from taking his pas -age down to Notting Hill to inquire. But iudeed, eveu had Mr S mpson made his usual appearance at his place of business tuat morning, it would have been too ranch to expect from human nature that beshou'd have devoted himself with his old attention to ledg er and invoh'es. When he did arrive there towards the afternoon, the youngest clerk saw there was something " on the governor's mind. He scarcely staid half an hour ; aud if his uu blemished commercial repute were any longer valuable to him, it would have been undoubt edly better if he had not looked in at all ; for he left the impression on the minds of the sub ordinates, that even the small and cautious house of Simpson k Son had not escaped in the last great commercial whirlpool ; and the errand-boy, who was well up in that depart ment of newspaper literature, gave it as his private opiuion to his mother at home, that it a " Paul & Pates* case. 1 g Mr S : mr-'DE w;: thiskis? little of his THE BRADFORD REPORTER. business, and still less what people thought of him. " I'll go to to town at once, my dear," he had said to his wife, after their first shock of surprise was over. " I'll go and see Grindles, poor John's agents, and see what thev can tell me alout it; they'll be able to give me every information of course, and advise me as what to do. I'll go to Griudles' at ouce ; and I'll just look into the counting-honse aud set Styles' mind at rest before I come back. I can bring my letters down here to answer."— (How far Styles' mind was set at rest has been already recorded.) To Messrs. Grindles' accordingly, at an un usual expence of cab-hire, Mr. Simpson proceed ed. If he had any floating doubts in his mind before as to the correctness of the announce ment in the Times, the remarkably grave and polite manner in which the junior Mr Grindle (whom he remembered hitherto as a rapid and somewhat supercillious young man) received him on his entrance, would have gone far to remove them. " Have you heard any thing lately of my cousin, Mr. John?" asked Mr. Simpson, with a voice which he felt was ner vous and and unsteady—that, however, was becoming under the supposed circumstances. " Sit down, I beg, my dear sir,—pray sit down ; sorry to say we have, very sorry in deed. Have you seeu this, my dear sir ?" producine a copy of the Homeward Mail, and pointing to a paragraph containing the same brief but important words as those which had caught the eyes of Mr. Simpson's* " I saw it in the Times this morning, and came to you to hear more about it. He was was coming home, I fancy, this month ?" " He was," said Mr. Grindle ; "he wrote n last mail to say we might expect him by the Formosa, which brought the mails as I under stand, yesterday ; he had taken his passage in her, he says in his letter. We were just going to telegraph down to Plymouth, to know if 1 she has landed her passengers, and whether your poor cousin is among them. I should | fear there can be no doubt of the correctness of this sad news—most sad, indeed, and sud den ; but we shall have answer to-night, and will at once let you know. You are aware, cf course, " continued Mr. Griudle, delicately, : " that you are your cousin's representative ?" "I am aware of it, sir," said Mr. Simpson, , bowing awkwardly, " I assure yon—" " Of course, my dear sir, of course these con siderations are premature. I trust, most sin cerely trnst, that we may have some intelli gence of our valued friend by the Formosa You may depend upon our tanking the most particular inquiries, and giving YOU the earli { est iuformation. Expecting hiai in town we were this very day, aud now! Well, Mr. Simpson, life is— But Mr. Grindle felt himself hardly equal to the definition, and filled up his unfinished sentence, by lifting up his eye™ and huntis | " But allow me to offer you—" " Nothing in the world, thank you"—and so they parted It was not natnral that Mr.Simpsin should i either feel or affect much sorrow for the death of a cousin whom be had not seen for nearly fifteen years. Yet sometimes, on his way home, when he remembered the days when they had played together as boys, the worthy trades man's heart reproached for the feelings of pos itive elation which he was conscious of since the news of the morning. He had never tho't much of the possibility of such an eveut as his j owu accession to the little Surrey estate. Mrs Simpson, it is true, had been fond at all times of descanting, even before their acquaintances, on her children's future " exjiectatious," not al together to her husband's satisfaction ; he had no notion, as he said, of teaching the young folks to set themselves up above their father and mother, which the younger daughter, Au gusta, was rather inclined to do. And it was not without some little misgiving that he con templated, during his solitary ride home, some of the possible effects of the change in their position upon the female members of his house hold. Still, it is very pleasant to feel one's self independent. The Simpsons were by no means rich ; —the son had succeeded the fath er iu a long-established but not very lucrative business, and bad neither the means uor the energv to extend it He had had his anxieties and losses, and he was fond of ease and quiet. To drop unexpectedly into a thousand a-year was. he coofes-ed to himself, a piece of good , fortune almost bewildering. If he and Mrs. Simpson sent the young folks to bed early that night (to Miss Augusta's great dudgeon), and sat over ths fire themselves somewhat la : ter than usual, discussing their future pros pects. they are not to be set dowu as more greedy and selfish than their neighbors. Again, at nine o'clock exactly the follow ing moruing, did the 'bus which Mr. Simpson usually patronized go to town without him ; and an aspiring young bauker's clerk, who lived close by, usurped from that time forward the well known coruer-seat, which baa belong | ed by a prescriptive right, wliiioglv recognized j by other passengers, to the " highly-respecta [ ble old city gent "' from number four. For Mr. Simpsou himself, at that hour, was busy read- I mg to Mrs. S., for the second time, the follow i ing important communication from Messrs. i Grindle:— " DEAR SIR, —On receipt of telegraphic mes sage yesterday evening, informing ns that no such passenger as 'Mr. John Simpson' had ar rived per steamer Formosa, we despatched a clerk at once per night mail to make further iuquiries Lie has just returned, and brings *i rd that Mr. John Simpson had engaged his passage by that vessel, and that some of his luggage is no*' actually on board He bad himself, as it appeared, left Tranqoebar for Point de Galle some weeks previously ; and the Ceylon papers, put on the Formosa just be fore sailing, contained the intelligence of his death. We shall write by this mail tooureor respondeuts in both places, and obtain all par ticulars. Meantime you may command our best advice and assistance.—Faithfully yours," &c. The breakfast at uumber four that morning was little more than a nominal meal to any of Le party except Ma iter Samuel E'thcr his PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REffiAßDl.nss OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." imagination was less lively, or his appetite less liable to be affected by his feelings. Mrs. Simpson aud Augusta were iu a state of mind abhorent from the coarse but comfortable snb stantials before them. Mr. Simpson played with his kuife aud fork, but allowed his rasher to grow cold before him untasted. After Messrs Grindles' letter had been discussed, they had be;o rather a silent party. The first dreams of sudden alflneuce were too vague and luxuri ant to shape into words. The ladies were in a little fairy-luud of their own, in which vis ions of smart carriages and unlimited millinery flashed before the eyes of their fancy. The husbaud felt, on the whole, almost as much puzzled as pleased. He had not yet succeeded in combiuiiig, to his own satisfaction, the pro prietorship of Barton End—so uncle Sam's conntry house was named—with the warehous es in Aldermanbury. A snug place at Wands worth, or any other favorite locality a few miles out of town, where he might have a run down every day to dinner, and spend his Sun days with au old friend or two for company— this had lonsr been an object of innocent am bition with hitn, aud a favorable castle-in-the air when he was in the mood for that kind of building, which, to do him justice, was but sel dom ; and if ever he had been inclined to tres pass on the tenth commandment, it was as of ten as he passed a certain smart new villa on the Harrow Road,belonging to a retired tobac conist of his acquaintance, where the pillars at the eutrance-gate preseuted two enormous ci gars, aud which bore the name of Havannnh Cotlage. That was very much Mr. Simpson's pattern of rual elegance and felicity. " 1 should like such a little place as Snuffsou's very well," had been the uearest approach to cnthuastic admiration which he had ever been heard to utter with regard to that or any oth er of the numerous snug retreats of British in dustry which he and Mrs. Simpson noticed in their summer-evening drives ; but it had been repeated more than once, and was evidently a pet dream of his. Mrs. Simpsou's ambition had always been on a grander scale, and more comprehensive iu its objects ; indeed, it had varied from the possession of Buckingham Palace, Life Guards iucluaed, to the oc_*upa tiou of No. 1 in their own terrace, which had a second drawing room aud plate-glass win dows. Either sphere, she felt she could adorn; meanwhile she was content to make un ex cellent wife, in her present contracted orbit.— An excellent wife, as Simpson often said to himself and his city friends, iu social confiden ces Did she not insist upon his always wear ing worsted hose and flannel waist coats from a given date which was assumed as the begin ning of winter? And if the peculiar irrita bility of Mr. Simpson's skin made this style of clothing especially disagreeable to him, could that be laid to her charge ? Was he to catch cold, and risk his precious life, be cause lie " didn't like the feel" of what was good for him? AH Mr. Simpson's shirts were made at home, either by her own hands or by those of her daughters. They did not cost much less, than was admitted ; the collars being made after an old and approved tiattern belonging to Mrs. Simpson's papa, treasured up as a sort of standard of w hat a collar sho'd" he—did, as Mr. Simpsou averred, cut him un der the ears, and double over behiud : but Mr. Simpson had a short neck, which was cer tainly no tault either of Mrs. S., or the col lars. She put the cayenne pepper, to which Mr. S., was rather addicted, carefully out of reach at dinner time—it was so bad for his digestion ; she woke him up ruthlessly from his after-dinner nap —those things grew upon old people, and were bad for a man of his full habit. She hid his snuff box, banished liisold "dowu-at heel" slippers aud worked bim a smart tight pair instead ; and, in short, tried as far as josnilile to keep him in the way in which he should go. Mrs. Sampson, it must be said, was ungrateful for some of these attentions, and evaded her well meant efforts with a per verse ingenuity, lie continually ignored or disputed the date of resuming the flannel and worsted, wore the new slippers down at heel, kept snuff in his waist coat pocket, and had gradually acquired the faculty of sleeping, like a fish, with his eyes open. But Simpson was the best-terajiered man in the world ; nnd he and his wife, iu spite of these little antagonis tic peculiarities, might have almost been claim ants for the flitch at Punmow. lie had a quiet will of his own, too in more important matters, which the lady, content with ack nowledged sovereignty in what she considered her own departments of government, had sense enough seldom to try to interfere with. They had two danghters—Mary, the ehle J t, who had i>een to a good school, and was now on a visit to a maiden aunt at Biixton, and who was tacitly admitted to be rather the father's pet —having a good deal of his quiet good seuse, and a very sweet disposition; and Au gusta, who had left home, and might be con sidered to have adopted more entirely her moth er's tastes and manners. In Master Samuel, the only son, now about twelve, the hopes of both parents were alike centred ; aud his go ing to school had been delayed from time to time—to that young gentleman's disadvan tage, a stranger might have thought—first, upon one pretext, aud theu another, partly be cause of tbe expense, but iu fact chiefly be cause - either father nor mo.her could make up their minds to part with him. There were momeuts, no doubt, wheD some unusual fit of troublesomeuess caused sentence of immediate deportation to be passed ; but it had never beeu put into execution, and be went on pick ing up such scraps of learning—good and evil —as the little suburban day school offered. " You'll give up tbe business, of course, Simpson?" said tbe wife after a pau-'e, foliow ing up one of her own trains of thought. " No, Sally ; I think not," quietly replied the husband. M r s. Simpson had been thinking not, too, in her own mind, and bad not much hope of any other aDswer when she put the qutstion. And she had very little confidence iu her uwu powers of persuasion on this point, though she did follow up the attack by remarking, that she saw no reason why he should go on stav ing a!! his htc when they ccai Jut 'saut t_e money. Mr. Simpson " wasn't above his bus iness," and didu't call it slaving ; aud as to wanting the money, everybody wanted money, as far as he saw ; be meant everything to go on in the city just as nsnal. " Law, pa, what ever for V' asked the euer ergetic Augusta. " For a good many reasons," replied her father. And that young lady, having also an instinctive suspicion that he meant what be said, relapsed into silence, as the servant en tered to clear the table ; for they had sat long though they bad said little. Aud Mr. Simp son went off, an hour later that usuul, to Al dermanbury. The wife aud daughter hardly felt inclined to settle themselves to their work-baskets as usual ufter breakfast, and Samuel had given himself a whole holiday in houor of an event which as yet he scarcely comprehended, and had begun to tease his sister to tell him all about it, when there came a ring at the bell, and Augusta, looking out of the parlor win dow which fully commanded all the approach es, announced the early visitor to be their neigh bor, old Mr. Burrows, of No. 0. He was a good natured, gossiping old bachelor, who had retired on a competency from a business of bis own of some kiud—it appears to be hardly etiquette in Portland Terrace to inquire iuto | particulars ou that point—aud occupied his leisure hours, ut present, in making himself master, as far as possible, of the business of other people. Not that there was a spice of ill-nature either in his curiosity or his gossip, but he liked, as he observed, to know what was going on ; aud it was wonderful what trouble he gave himself about his neighbors' affairs—what clever plots and plans he laid for other people, and what very little thanks he got for it. He would have done anything in the world to oblige bis frieuds the Simp sons, except let them alone. llis interference, however, was never re sented : iu fact, he was looked upon as a privileged friend of the family; and no one was surprised or annoyed at his early visit.— The derangement iu Mr. Simpson's usual movemeuts had not escaped his busy precep tious, of course ; for he spent a good deal ol his time in looking out of his window, aud in holding conversations with his housekeeper, who kept him excellently well informed of all the doings in the Terrace. Samuel, who was very fond of the old gentleman (an unrequited attachment as it appeared) danced rouud him on his entrance with unusual glee. " Well, my little man, good morning, good morning," said Mr. Burrows in the passage, soothing Master Samuel's antics as one would a restive horse ; " we seem very lively here ; what's going on eh ?" " Oh ! I'apa'scousin John's dead, aud we're all so glad !" " Sum, come here, you shocking boy I" screamed Augusta, always prompt in a difficul ty, for Mrs. Simpson was aghast and speech less at this abrupt statement of the cireum stances ; and she rushed into the passage, aud seized and shook the offender vigorously. " What's that lor?" said Samuel rebcllious ly, while Mr. Burrowstried to mediate, "Aiut I to tell Mr. Burrows, then V " For shame, sir,"said his mother ; "is that the way to speak of your poor coustu's death '" And having duly wticomed her visitor, she proceeded to discriminate, uot very lucidly, be tween cause and effect. A relative ot her husband's icas dead—very suddenly : that, of course, was very shocking. Some family prop erty had thereby come to them ; whica, with tueir rising family, was of course very accept able. It was undeniable ; Mr. Burrows said " Of course." " And I hope," said the kind-hearted old gentleman, after a few little inqu.ries as to the probable amount of their new fortuue, and other circumstances which the iady was ahno.-t as glad to communicate as he was to learn— " I hoj>e ihis will smooth matters a little for my voung friends, you kuow—tb, my det.r Mrs. Simpson f Mrs Snupsou looked embarrassed. It was not because she-did not know to what young friend- Mr. Burrows alluded, or that there was any mystery in the matter, in spite of that gentltuiau's attempt at a wink. But it was tire very last subject she wished to converse upon just at this time. " Augusta, my love," said she, "just put on yonr bounet—that's a dear—aud go and ask how old Mrs. Mausou is ; we uever sent there all day yesterday, my head was so full of other things, aud its reaiiy quite uuueigbborlj." Miss Augusta having beeo ea-iiy disposed of by this means—the more easily as the sub ject had long lost its novelty for her, and she did not therefore think it worth her while to make resistance—Mrs. Simpson, having gained also a little time to think,proceeded to reply to her visitor's last questiou ; or rather to lead him off Irora it so as to avoid, if possible, giv ing any reply to it at all. Her daughter Mary—to whom Mr. Burrows little speech alluded—had lately become pos sessed af that delightful but dangerous play thing—a lover. There was nothing very ro mautic about the attachment, which might in part account tor the fact that the course of their love, which was very true and honest, had hitherto run perfectly smooth, though there seetned a good many windings in pros pect before it could hope to reach the oceau of matrimony. A very fine young fellow was George Harrison ; lookiug and walking and speaking as much like a gentleman as if he had speut his early years at Eton and Oxfoid, instead of passing at one from Highgate school into his nncle's counting-house. His uncle and Mr. Simpson were old friends ; and he was also distantly related to Mr. Burrows, with whom he—and consequently Mary—was an especial favorite. Not that Mary required any thing beyond her own sweet, thoughtful face and winning manner to make her a favor ite with most of her acquaintances, old and young. There bad been no talk of marriage at present ; both were young enough to wait, and. as yet, fooud the waiting very pleasant. > Friends ou both sides were propitious ; or, at L.y rate, rbcugh perfectly cf rbe slate or affairs, bad interposed no sort of objection; and it seemed tacitly understood that in two or three yean' time or so, when some opening offered to enable George to do something for himself, he would come forward manfully and claim Mary for himself " for better or for worse," without any very formidable discus sion about settlements. Nothing had been seen of him in Portland Terrace for the last fortnight, which had been naturally accounted for by the fact of Mary's being at Brixton.— Aunt Martha was the kindest creature in the world—none the less kind in soch cases, be cause her own youth had been sad and disap pointed—and if she could not fairly attribute George Harrison's frequent visits and thought ful little presents to her own attractions, she was well content to play the part of wall be tween the yonng Pyiamus aud Thisbe. But their " Lion " too, poor souls, was al ready roaring iu the distance, and from a very unexpected quarter. A very gentle beast too it might have been thought. But Uncle Sam's property, which had brought the flutterings of so mnch pleasure in anticipation to the rest of the Simpson household, had a root of bitter ness in store for poor Mary and her lover.— And there were persons at all events who were likely to be siucere mourners, though, like many of her mourners, they had but selfLh reasons, for " poor cousiu John." When Augusta hud closed the 'door, her mother resumed the iuterrupted conversation " Oh ! you mean that flirtation between George Harrison and Mary, I suppose. Well, I haven't heard much about it lately, do you know ?" "Flirtation! my dear ma'am, why, arn't they engaged to be married ?" " They uever told me so, I assure you, Mr. Burrows." It was true to the very letter. "No ; nor they never told me so either. Mrs. Simpsou but I suspect they have told each other so over and over again. Yon don't mean to say anything uasgoue wrong between them after ail Nothing whatever that I know of, Mr. Burrows," rejoined tlie lady in her coldest and driest tone ; " Mary's far too young to thick about tnarryiug yet, and me and Mr. Simpson object to long engagements." There was something so unusually dignified iu Mrs. Simpson's tone, that poor Mr Bur rows, who was no match for auy woman iu a conversation of this nature, for some moments could only look at her with astonishment ; but he couciuded at last that her prospective riches had refined her philosophy, though without improving her grammar. He was much too honest and simple minded himself to suspect the change which such a prospect could effect iu two days iu her maternal feelings. "The fact is, my dea. Mr. Burrows," con tinued the lady, shrugging her shoulders aud puttiug on a confidential air, " there has been, as we all kuow, a little—a little nonsense go ing ou betweeu them, as there always will be amongst young people, but nothing really on either side, I faucy." A little nonsense ! nothing serious ! Why Mr. Burrows himself had joked and poked them m&uy a time at certain snug little sup p rs which were wont to take place bcth at No. 4 and No. 6, Mrs. Simpson her?elf being preseut, and laughing heartily ; and there she .-at before hitn now locking the very picture of cco! and unembarrassed innocence, while poor Mr. Burrows felt himself coloring with modest shame aud indignation, It was interesting to see the progress Mrs. Simpson was making iu the duties of her new position. It was an awkward interview, but she was going through it wonderfully, as she thought herself. " You kuow, Mr. Burrows, in this world young people can't marry without money." "They cau't marry in the oiher world even with it, I suppose, ma'am ; but I thought now the mouey was come." He was beginning to suspect the real workings of the mother's mind, aud was more abrupt and less polite than usual. " Oh, Mary mustn't look to her father for any thing at present; there's no ready money, and a deal to I e done on the property ; our daughters won't be heiresses, indeed, Mr. Burrows ; n but Mrs, Simpson could not resist a gratified smile at the notion. " George wasn't looking for an heiress when he fixed upon ycur Mary, Mrs S.mpson ; he would scorn to murry any girl for he* moi.ey ; but he's good enough for the biggest heiress in England, George is ; ay, and many a one 1 would be glad enough to have him, ma'am, without a farthing, that they would ! But as you say, ma'am, yonng folks can't marry with out something to begin the world with ; and all I kuow is, it 1 had had a fori'n left me,and M iss Maiy were my daughter, I'd -peud half of it to make her happy, ma'aui, that's what I would !" " Ah, my good sir, how eay it is for you to talk who have uo children, and can't feel as Ido 1" And the smile now took the charac ter of triomphaat sujieriority, which could uf ford to pity It is a valuable and unanswerable .argument aguiust alt bachelors. What can they know about it ? Mr. Burrows gave in, foiled, but indignant. It had been foretold to him in the days of his youth, by a gypsy fortune-teller, that he should listen to a tail, fair lady, who should speak him fair, aud turn out a dark de ceiver. "Beware of her !" had been the omi nous words, and he had walked in fear and trembliug in the presence of a 1 such enchan tresses all the days of his life Aud now the prophecy seemed in the way of being fulfilled, like all prophecies, in the most unlooked-for manner : to be sure the lady now before Lim was not tall, but she was fair, and that was qu.te close an interpretation a. s such fulfilments admit of. lie wished Mrs. Simpson " a very good morning," refused to listen to the syren voice which she put on to soothe and stay him, aui left her rather disconcerted with her own success, for she bad no desire to offend him. " Confound br for a covetous old sinner !" was Mr. Burrows' explosion within his own , breast as he stamped energetically along the terrace "So she thinks her da igh'erj may 1.-ck L' c '-e." t. v tLey've c— ce cf VOTj. XX. —NO. 21. money, and means to throw poor George over! I'll give him a hint, though, of what he's got to expect, and hang me if he shan't be before hand with them iu crying off : 1 wou't hare him jilted by any such rubbish V By the time, however, that he got a mile from his cwu door—for he was much too in dignant to go in and sit down—and had cool ed himself iu that labyriuth of muddy fields and unfinished houses north of Xottiag HilJ, beyond the knowledge even of cabs aDd police men, called by the residents, for some mysteri ous reason, Kensington Park, he began to think within himself that the term " rubbish " could not apply with any degree of fitness to his favorite Mary Simpson, if the mother was spoiled by a little sudden prosperity, it wus no reason the daughter should be.— " George wouldu't have given her up," ha thought, " not if he'd been left a million !" And why should the girl be less honest than he was ? So Mr. Burrows resolved, with a very u ise and unusual self-denial, to let things take their own course for the present, and to smother his knowledge of Mrs. Simpson'* baseness as he best might, withiu his owu breast. Mary came home from her aunt's the next day, and heard the news of the unexpected change in the family fortunes with so little out ward emotiou as to disappoint very considera bly her sister and mother, both of whom tho'i to have had the pleasure of overwhelming her by the magnificence of their announcement.— Perhaps one reason for her taking it so quiet ly, was, that at the moment she did not con nect it in the least with her engagement with George Harrisou ; for engaged they had been tor the last six mouths, as Airs. Simpson was perfectly well aware—though certainly sbo had received no formal notification of the fact —and therefore thought herself quite justified in professing ignorance to Mr. Burrows. Per haps Mary thought of George so much, that every thing which did not directly refer to him seemed to her of little importance. Giris are so foolish sometimes. She felt very glad ou her father's account ; she remembered once, wheu she was but a child, and some little dif ficulty about mouey had occurred, as such things will occur in the truding community even to the most prudeut, that he had said to her mother iu her hearing, "Ah, Sally, if I had a thousand pounds !" and how much she had wished some oue would give her a thou sand pounds to give him, aud wondered wheth er she could ever save so much out of her monthly allowance of half a crown, by being more careful in the matter of boot-laces ; aud now he would have a thousand pounds every year ! She wished some of it had come then; tor she had dim and painful recollections of her mother crying, aud her father walking about the room instead of eatiug his supper, aud of herself going to bed with a heavy and puzzled heart, after a long kiss from him which she knew by instinct had as much sorrow as love in it. If she asked him more questions when he came home from the city that even ing about Barton End, and whether he had ever been there, aud what sort of a place it was, aud when he meant to go aud live there, than even Mrs. Simpson or .Augusta had yet asked, it was not because Mary was more curious or more impatieut than the others, or because the thought of their new wealth was more delightful to her, or because she was as tired as her mother and sister had suddenly profis-ed themselves, of living " poked up in London " (perhaps she had her private rea sons to the contrary), but because these were new and pkasaut sources of a common inter est between her father and herself, which she felt after all she could cuter into much more heartily than his u-ual topics of eouversatiou, which had seldom goue beyond the dry details of the ri>e and fall of markets, or the last commercial gossip from the city ; and poor Mary had often confessed, rather to the an noyance of her family, that she had not much natural taste for shop craft, and had always found herself much more congenially occupied in Aunt Martha's quiet cottage at Brixton, where there were books, aud Uowers, aud old songs which she was never tired of singing, or her auut of hearing. In fact, Mary, though almost unconsciously to herself, aud certainly not admitted to such distinction by either moth er or sifter, was quite the lady of the family. Mr. Simpsoi. felt it every day, though he could not Lave put it into words ; a:id his own hon est but uncultivated miad warmed and opeued with a strange but not unusual attraction to his eldt-r daughter* influence. Ilis w,fe com plained on this very evening,not without soma truth, that Mary had got more out of her father in a f. w minutes tnan she and Augusts had arr ved at iu all their cross-examination of hiin since the new - arrived. For Mr. S.mpsou had actu .liy, for a few weeks in his boyhood, been a dweller in this j aradise (for such the Surrey country house hud become iu their vu id iniagiuii atiousand coi 11 remember ail about it, they were sure, if he chose. " My loves. I don't remember ranch about it : I was only-a boy, you km w (and tliat'i a long wl i!e ago, Sally); bit 1 remember poor Uncle Sam w.s very k id, audit was a very nice pia.e to me after I, udoo strtet*, as you may suppose. I cau recollect, as well as if it were yesterday, galloping the pony about the park." "There. Pa," (creamed Augusta; "you never toll! us before that there was a park ! Oh.what a beautiful place it must le !" •• it ahs csi I led a park, Uiy dear, but it was ou'y a fi Id : it bad been a larger place once. I believe, but there was not hi ug very grand about it ia uncle Saai's diys." " And shall I have a pouy to ride. Pa?"' asked Samuel " You shall go to school at all events, bi boy,'' said L.a talLer, looking at hiui rather thought! uliy. Tnis was a view of his inheritance uot al together so gratifying to Master Sa-uuel ; though his sister, to whom he bad been rnoiu thau usually tnublr.-onie tb*t ittOfniug. ex pressed her emphatic opioiou, that it would " do him a deal of good.' ■ Aud A '.a must hare a goverue&s to __.. L ..Le !„e another